BringBackTheCamaro
Mechanical
- Feb 27, 2006
- 4
Hi everyone,
I'm assembling a 4 bolt 350 SBC kit I bought from Larry's Performance in Montebello, California (TERRIBLE company by the way). I am having problems with the front main cap.
I'm installing ARP studs and it is unusually difficult to install one of the studs with the cap in place. It will screw all the way in but requires a significant amount of torque on an allen wrench to do so, even with lubricant. Without the cap in place the stud will screw in freely by hand just like the others. I noticed a slight resistance above normal for the other stud, but nothing like the stud I just mentioned. I made sure the cap is facing the correct direction. I took out the studs and left the cap in place and looked down the holes with a headlight. The holes in the cap appear to be not perfectly centered with the holes in the block - possibly a cap from from a different block?
Sure I can install the cap and the crank spins freely (with what I think to be a reasonable amount of resistance from friction) but the fact that the stud is stressed such a way worries me. You can actually see how it is deflected to the side of the bolt hole in the cap. I don't think the stud is actually bending, I think its just shifting in its threads.
Could/Should I bother drilling the bolt holes in the cap to a larger size so they dont touch the studs? The registers would still keep the cap centered in the critical direction.
Then again, if that interference is eliminated, might it actually put the bore out of alignment? - assuming the mains were assembled and bored/honed with the interference present.
Thanks ahead for any advice!
I'm assembling a 4 bolt 350 SBC kit I bought from Larry's Performance in Montebello, California (TERRIBLE company by the way). I am having problems with the front main cap.
I'm installing ARP studs and it is unusually difficult to install one of the studs with the cap in place. It will screw all the way in but requires a significant amount of torque on an allen wrench to do so, even with lubricant. Without the cap in place the stud will screw in freely by hand just like the others. I noticed a slight resistance above normal for the other stud, but nothing like the stud I just mentioned. I made sure the cap is facing the correct direction. I took out the studs and left the cap in place and looked down the holes with a headlight. The holes in the cap appear to be not perfectly centered with the holes in the block - possibly a cap from from a different block?
Sure I can install the cap and the crank spins freely (with what I think to be a reasonable amount of resistance from friction) but the fact that the stud is stressed such a way worries me. You can actually see how it is deflected to the side of the bolt hole in the cap. I don't think the stud is actually bending, I think its just shifting in its threads.
Could/Should I bother drilling the bolt holes in the cap to a larger size so they dont touch the studs? The registers would still keep the cap centered in the critical direction.
Then again, if that interference is eliminated, might it actually put the bore out of alignment? - assuming the mains were assembled and bored/honed with the interference present.
Thanks ahead for any advice!